AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST 
[July, 
Q 2 Q 
UNIVERSAL 
CLOTHES WRINGER. 
No. 1. Lakgh FAMILY WRINGER.$10.00 
No. 2. Medium 
No. 2 'A. “ 
No. S. Small “ 
No. 8. Large HOTEL 
No. 18. Medium LAUNDRY 
No. 22. Large “ 
(to ran by steam) 
( or hand, S 
? .00 
0.00 
5.50 
14.00 
18.00 
30.00 
NOS. 2M AND 3 HAVE NO COGS—ALL OTHERS ARE 
WARRANTED. 
Mr. Judd, of the American Agriculturist says of tlie 
Ufliivcrsal CloSlses Wringer: 
“From several years’ experience with it in our own tamily, 
from the testimony of hundreds who have used it, and from 
the const ruction of the •implement itself,—we feel certain 
that it is worthy a place in every family where the washing 
is done at home. A child can readily wring out a tubful of 
clothes in a few minutes. It is in reality A CLOTHES SAV¬ 
ER! A TIME SAVER! and A STRENGTH SAVER! The 
eaving of garments will alone pay a large percentage on its 
cost. We think the machine much more lhan PAYS LOR 
ITSELF EVERY YEAR in the saving of garments! There 
are several kinds, nearly alike in general construction, but 
we consider it important that the Wringer he fitted with 
Cogs, otherwise a mass of garments may clog the rollers, 
and the rollers upon the crank-shaft slip and tear the 
clothes. Our own is one of the first made, and it is as GOOD 
AS NEW after nearly FOUR YEARS’ CONSTANT USE.” 
EVERY WRINGER WITH COG-WH1EEL.S 
IS WARRANTED I!N EVERY PARTICULAR. 
A good CANVASSER wanted in every Town. 
On receipt of the price from places where no one Is 
selling, we will send the wringer FREE OF EXPENSE. 
JR. C. BROWNING, 347 Broadway, New-York. 
The NONPAREIL WASHING MACHINE 
Is the only entirely reliable machine in use. 
It has been before the public two years, and has not in any 
instance failed to give satisfaction. 
II saves two-thirds the labor and time required in hand 
washing. 
It is a squeezing machine, and will not injure the finest 
clothing. 
A girl of fourteen years can operate it. 
It will not get out of order. 
It is recommended by Mr. Judd, the proprietor of this 
Jon rnal. 
Prices: No. 1, $12. No. 2,$16. No. 3, $20. 
Send for free Circular to 
OAKLEY & KEATING. 73 South-st., Now-York. 
$—SOMETHING NEW ! AGENTS WANTED. 
Our New “ Fancy Card Thermometers"—" Hummer and 
Shield” for hand sewing—" Improved Indelible Pencil” for 
marking linen, and 10 more novel, useful and indispens¬ 
able articles, are warranted to give satisfaction.—Samples 
25c. each. For circulars and terms address 
KICE & CO., 37 Park Row, N. Y. 
BARON LIEBIG’S GREAT WORK ON AGRI¬ 
CULTURE. THE RESULT OF 16 YEARS 
OBSERVATION ! 
D. APPLETON k €0., 443 k 445 Broadway, N. Y., 
PUBLISH THIS DAY 
THE 
NATURAL LAWS OF HUSBANDRY, 
BY 
JUSTUS VON LIEMG, 
EDITED BY 
John Blytli, 
Professor of Chemistry in Queen’s College, Cork. 
1 Vol., large 12mo., cloth, 387 pages. $1.50. 
In this work Baron Liebig has given to the public bis ma¬ 
ture views on agriculture, after iO years of experiment and 
reflection. 
Sent free by mail on receipt of price. 
ONION CULTURE—Fourth (new) Edition. 
This work comprises in 32 pages all the particulars for suc¬ 
cessful Onion Culture, from Selection of Seed to Marketing 
the Crop—being the practical directions given by seventeen 
experienced Onion Growers, residing in different parts of the 
country. Price 20 cents (or 7 stamps), sent post-paid. Ad¬ 
dress Publisher of Agriculturist. 
.A. Mare Chance l 
The “PRINTER’S DEVIL,” a handsome illustrated literary 
family journal, will be sent free of postage, on trial, six 
months,' for the nominal price of twenty five cents. 
B3?"This paper is one of the best in the country, 
and only needs to be seen to be liked. Address “Editor 
PRINTER’S DEVIL, Box 2900, New-York.” 
TOBACCO, 
Just How to Grow it. 
Every particular, from the selection of the Seed, and 
preparation of the ground, to the Gathering, Curing, and 
Marketing the Crop, is given in a work issued by the 
Publisher of the American Agriculturist , and sent post¬ 
paid for 25 cents. This work consists of a selection of 
the best fourteen out of eighty-five Essays, prepared by 
eighty-five different cultivators, residing in various parts 
of the Northern and Middle States. In each of the Essays 
contained in this work, the writer tells, in a plain, practi¬ 
cal, straight-forward manner, just what to do, and howto 
do it. Any item omitted by one is given by another, so 
that the information is full and complete. Several en¬ 
gravings illustrating the method of drying, packing, etc. 
The work is worth its weight in silver to everyone grow¬ 
ing even a small plot of tobacco. 
A SPLENDID PREMIUM to any person sending six year¬ 
ly subscribers to Mine. Demorest’s Mirror of Fashions, 
at $1 each, before the 1st of September next, will be sent a 
$5 Running-Stitch Sewing-Machine and an extra copy of 
the Mirror of Fashions, and to each subscriber the 50 cents 
worth of Extra Patterns and a Card de Visite of the Lil- 
iputians and Barnum, five in a group. 
POLAK REFRI(^EIUTOR, 
Maintains the Pre-eminence, and has always received the 
Highest Premium over all other Refrigerators. 
LESLEY & ELLIOT, Manufacturers, 
494 Broadway, New-York. 
SEAT DISCOVERY, 
An adhesive preparation, that is insoluble in Water or Oil, 
and that will stick Patches and Linings to Boots and Shoes 
sufficiently strong without stitching. It will also mend broken 
Furniture, Crockery, Toys, and all articles of Household use 
effectually. 
HILTON’S 
INSOLUBLE CEMENT, 
Supplied in packages from 2 ounces to 100 pounds. It is a 
Liquid, and as easily applied as Common PasVe. It adheres 
Oily Substances firmly and completely. 
Can be procured at wholesale in all large cities, and at re¬ 
tail throughout the country. 
HILTON BROTHERS, Proprietors, Providence, Ii. I. 
“A Good Thing— Having occasion the other day to use a 
liquid Cement, wo. tried the article made by Hilton Brothers, 
Providence, and found it to work to a charm. We therefore 
recommend it.”— Woonsocket Patriot , Feb. 6,1863. 
CHAS. RICHARDSON & CO., 61 Broad-st., Boston, Mass., 
Agents for New-England. 
For sale in New-York by 
HALL & RUCKEL, 218 Greenwich-st, 
H. C. OAKLEY, 11 Park Row. 
T. HARDY, 208 Broadway. 
M. WARD, CLOSE & CO., 130 William-st. 
Stammering, 
Cured by Bates’ Patent scientific appliances, the only 
known means for the rapid and permanent cure of Stammer¬ 
ing, Stuttering, &c. They received a Prize Medal at the last 
London Exhibition. 
For (new Edition of) Pamphlets and Drawings describing 
the same, address H. C. L. MEARS, 277 West 23cl-St., N. Y. 
A GENTS WANTED.— To take orders for VIC¬ 
TOR’S HISTORY OF THE REBELLION, the acknowl¬ 
edged Standard. Endorsed by the President, Cabinet, Mem¬ 
bers of Congress, Governors, Bancroft, the Historian, and by 
the Press generally.—Two volumns now ready, expensively 
illustrated with Steel Engravings—Sold by subscription on¬ 
ly, and exclusive Territory given. Canvassers make from 
$50 to $100 per week.—Send for Circular of terms, etc. Ad¬ 
dress EDW. F. HOVEY, No. 13 Spruce st., New-York. 
B<U>©K§ FOR FARMERS 
AW© OTHERS. 
[Any of the following books can be obtained at the of¬ 
fice of the Agriculturist at the prices named, or they will be 
forwarded by mail, postpaid , on receipt of the price. Other 
books not named in the list will be procured and sent to sub¬ 
scribers when desired, if the price be forwarded. All of these 
books may be procured by any one making up a libra¬ 
ry. Those we esteem specially valuable, are marked with a *.j 
N. 15. —For books going over 1,500 miles, 18 cents extra on 
each dollars worth must be sent to us to pre-pay the extra 
postage, and in the same ratio for fractional parts of a dollar. 
American Bird Fancier.. 
American Farmer’s Encyclopedia.. 
American Florist’s Guide. 
American Weeds and Useful Plants. 
Allen on the Culture ot the Grape . 
Allen’s (R. L.) American Farm Book*. 
Allen’s Diseases of Domestic Animals. 
Allen’s (L. F.) Rural Architecture. 
Bridgeman’s Fruit Cultivator’s Manual. 
Bridgeman’s Young Gardener’s Assistant.. 
Bridgeman’s Kitchen.Garden Instructor. 
Bridgeman’s Florist's Guide...... 
Brandt’s Age of Horses* (English and German). 
Breck’s Book of Flowers. 
Browne’s American Poultry Yard.. 
Buist’s American Flower Garden Directory. 
Buist’s Family Kitchen Gardener*. 
Central Park Guide.. 
Chorlton’s Grape-Grower’s Guide*. 
Cole’s (S. W.) American Fruit Book. 
Dadd’s (Geo. H.) Modern Horse Doctor. 
Dadd’s (Geo. H.) American*Cattle Doctor. 
Dana’s Muck Manual 1'orFarmers. 
Downing’s Cottage Residences*. 
Downing’s Fruits and Fruit-Trees of America**. 
Downing’s Ladies’ Flower Garden. 
Eastwood on the Cranberry* . 
Employment of Women—By Virginia Penny*. 
Every Lady her own Flower Gardener. 
Fessenden’s American Kitchen Gardener. 
French’s Farm Drainage *. 
Field’s (Thomas W.) Pear Culture. 
Fish Culture... 
Flint (Charles L.) on Grasses*. 
Flint’s Milch Cows and Dairy Farming*. 
Fuller’s Strawberry Culturist. 
Goodale’s Principles of Breeding.. 
Gray’s Manual of Botany. 
Guenon on Milch Cows. 
Hall's (Miss) American Cookery. 
Harris’ Insects Injurious to Vegetation plain. 
do. do. do. do. colored plates. 
Herbert’s Hints to Horsekeepers**. 
Hooper’s Dog and Gun. 
Johnson on Manures. 
Kemps Landscape Gardening. 
Kidder’s Bee Culture. 
Lamrstroth on the Honey Bee* . 
Leslie s Recipes for Cooking. 
Leuchars* Hothouses. 
Liebig’s Lectures on Chemistry. 
Linsley’s (D. C.) Morgan Horses. 
Manual of Agriculture by G. Emerson and C. L. Flint. 
Mavlicw’s Illustrated Horse Doctor. 
McMahon’s American Gardener* ... . 
Meehan’s Ornamental Trees.. . 
Milburn on the Cow and Dairy. 
Miles on the Horse’s Foot. . — 
Mistakes of Educated Men. 
National Almanac and Annual Records?.. 
Norton’s Scientific Agriculture. 
Olcott’s Sorgho and Iinphee. 
Our Farm of Four Acres. .*— (paper).— 
Onion Culture**... 
Pardee on Strawberry Culture. 
Parlor Gardener. 
Parsons on the Rose. . 
Pedder’s Farmer’s Land Measurer. 
Phantom Bouquet, or Skeleton Leaves. .. 
Phin’s Grape Culture .. 
Quinby’s Mysteries ot Bee keeping*. 
Randall’s Sheep Husbandry . 
Richardson on the Dog. 
Richardson on the Hog.. . 
Robins’ Produce and Ready Reckoner. 
Rose Culturist. 
Shepherd’s Own Book. 
Skillful Housewife .. 
Smith’s Landscape Gardening . .. 
Spencer’s Education ot Children**. 
Stewart’s (John) Stable Book... 
Tobacco Culture** . 
Todd’s (S. E.) Young Farmer s Manual. 
Tucker’s Register Rural Affairs. 
Turner’s Cotton Planter's Manual.. 
Watson’s American Home Garden. 
Wood’s Class Book of Botany... 
Yale College Agricultural Lectures. 
Youatt and Spooner on the Horse. 
Youatt and Martin on Cattle. 
Youatt on the Hog. 
Youatt on Sheep. 
Youmans’ Household Science* . 
$0 25 
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WEBSTER’S 
army and navi pocket dictionary. 
(Just published,) weighs four ounces, and contains a Gener¬ 
al Pocket Dictionary of the language ; a Dictionary 
of Military and Nayal Terms ; a Dictionary of Pro¬ 
verbs, Phrases, and Oft-quoted Words, from Latin, 
French, Italian, Spanish, Greek, &c., with tables of Rank, 
Pay, Rations, Emoluments, Insignia of Rank, &c., in army 
and navy. Tables of Measures, Weights and Moneys of dif¬ 
ferent nations; Fac-Similes of Flags of Commercial Nations, 
&c., &c. Price in flexible leather, marbled edges, 75c. tucks 
$1. Every officer and private, and every one desiring to un¬ 
derstand accounts of military and naval affairs, wants one. 
Sent securely by mail, post-paid, at the price. Published at 5 
and 7 Mercer-street, New-York, by MASON BROTHERS. 
